So That’s What They Look Like

I’m going to post a word, and I want you to tell me what mental image you get when you read it. Ready?

Penknife.

So what picture did you get in your mind? Maybe an object with short blades that fold up out of a protective cover? Or a Swiss Army knife with seventeen other bits and bobs on it beside a blade or two?

Well, had you been a nineteenth century miss, this is what you would have thought of:

Not much like today’s penknives, is it?  That’s because it wasn’t. In the 19th century, a penknife was exactly that—a knife used to make or trim pens.

Up until the mass production of the steel-nib dip pen in the early 1820s (though metal pens had been around since the early 18th century), the chief type of pens in use were made from quills, usually the primary flight feathers of large birds like geese, hawks, eagles, or turkeys. They actually make good pens; the hollow shaft of a quill serves as an ink reservoir, and a properly prepared quill can last a long time (though not as long on today’s wood-pulp based paper which can quickly wear down tips; they do best with parchment and vellum.)

Unlike what you might see in movies, a quill prepared for writing usually has most of the fluffy bits—the barbs—removed, so that they don’t chafe the writer’s hand. The shafts are heat-treated, which makes them stiffer (different methods can be used, from placing the quills in hot water or heated sand or ashes from the fire.) Then, one gets out one’s penknife and prepare the tip. There’s a great explanation of how to trim a quill here, for the truly curious…and it explains the fine, thin shape of a penknife’s blade since the blade was inserted into the quill at one point. Note on the photo of my penknife the shape of the handle—curved to fit comfortably against the fingers when shaving off bits of quill.

So that’s what a penknife is. And though I’m very happy with my laptop for writing, I can’t help sighing a little for the pretty desk accoutrements of the nineteenth century.  Maybe I could find someone to make me a pretty mother-of-pearl cover for my mouse?

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5 thoughts on “So That’s What They Look Like”

  1. This is reminding me of . . . I forget which of Connie Willis’ time travel books; I think To Say Nothing of the Dog? . . . when one of the characters is delighted to discover what a penwiper is.

    1. In my youth I was in an English run elementary level school. We made and used a set of 5 penwipers – a clean one for each day of the week -demerits if you forgot to bring the clean one (also a clean hankerchief) each day.

  2. Phyllis Irene Radford

    I have a mother of pearl handled fountain pen that was my grandmother’s. I also have a mother of pearl knotting shuttle (precursor to the tatting shuttle).

  3. I have my mother’s fountain pen (and my own) all in storage with my life, but she had a nice steel nib for a right-handed person, which I cannot use. I don’t remember anything in the box I didn’t recognize except a tiny rag. Which was probably her pen wiper! (I am evil and have used high rag content paper towels when I need a bit of tip help.)

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